Downtown innovation district: Developers envision 30-story Lightwell project as its own startup hub
October 2, 2019 | Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts
It’s possible the Lightwell building’s exterior hasn’t been cleaned since 1977, joked Tim Schaffer as he walked a vine-wrapped rooftop terrace that overlooks downtown Kansas City.
“It was totally unintentional, the way it came together,” Schaffer, president of AREA Real Estate Advisors, said of the multi-million-dollar office redevelopment project that’s quickly evolved into what Schaffer and the Lightwell team liken to a downtown innovation district.
Beneath the 30-story former City Center Square building’s dated, wood-paneled walls and dust-drenched carpets lie polished concrete floors and pillars, exposed beams and floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking breathtaking views of the city’s skyline. More than an aesthetic, the blank-slate features signal the building’s modern rebirth and serve as a symbol of the redevelopment team’s commitment to severing ties with archaic approaches to corporate real estate, said Schaffer.
Where some simply see an aging vertical office complex that evolved from an indoor shopping mall into the home of numerous law firms — and a building whose history and unique features slipped from the public eye as newer high-rise projects emerged around it and deterioration set in — Schaffer and Basel Bataineh envision something more significant to Kansas City’s future, they said.

Lightwell
Lightwell is expected to provide a three-stage system for tech-growth in Kansas City — a school for tech talent, coworking space for startups and private office space for scaling companies, explained Bataineh, vice president at Somera Road, the New York-based commercial real estate investor working to redevelop Lightwell alongside AREA.
“If we’re going to have five tech companies upstairs that are having credible funding and are growing super fast, we need a school downstairs that’s producing employees to keep them growing,” he said.
“We want education going on in the building so that [students] can just get on the elevator and go up to their new job,” Schaffer added, noting the team’s overall vision for reimagining the decades-old building, which could include partnerships with such tech training programs as LaunchCode. The developers already locked a deal with WeWork to open a second Kansas City location, occupying more than 100,000 square feet of space between Lightwell’s third and fourth floors.
Click here to read more about WeWork’s second metro location, slated to open before the end of the year.
“[This model] helps us, helps them and helps the market,” Bataineh said, noting access to adequate and flexible office space as a growing need for entrepreneurs who want to drill down and build companies that exit.
Did you know?
The name of the Lightwell project comes from a city-block-spanning glass feature that illuminates some interior portions of the office development with natural light. Dating back to the building’s construction, the original lightwell is being replaced with an updated, cleaner version of the design as part of the Lightwell redevelopment.
“There wasn’t enough room for growing technology companies to have larger space in the Crossroads at an affordable cost,” he added.
“You have nice office space … but nothing that’s that cool or that different or that modern and that’s what we’re creating,” Bataineh said of what’s attracting startups to Lightwell.
Click here to read about BacklotCars recent relocation to a 20,000 square-foot space on the 15th floor of Lightwell.
Startup leaders with buy-in are taking notice of the momentum behind the emerging innovation district at Lightwell — including those at the wheel of another one of Kansas City’s most recognizable and heavily-funded tech startups, which is expected to announce a lease with Lightwell in the coming weeks, Schaffer teased.
“These are tech entrepreneurs who are trying to grow a business, not worry about real estate,” Bataineh said. “We’re trying to solve that problem for them.”

Basel Bataineh, Somera Road; and Tim Schaffer, AREA Real Estate Advisors
And it doesn’t end with the design of a modern and efficient office space, Batanieh added. As plans for Lightwell came together, he and Schaffer sat down with local founders and asked them about their needs, they said.
Rising high on the list of obstacles founders: drawing top tech talent to a still-fledgling Kansas City ecosystem.
“In combination with WeWork — which is naturally attracting startups — startups are going to be acquired, train new people … [this project] is creating an ecosystem that’s going to enable everyone’s growth,” Batanieh said. “We’re excited about it.”
Construction at Lightwell — which will also include a first floor food hall and event space — is expected to be complete in January 2020.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
How an animal health leader’s $130M investment in KC will boost its fight against canine parovirus
ELWOOD, Kansas — A $130 million investment from global animal health leader Elanco is a testament to Kansas’ pro-business economy, said Laura Kelly, lauding this week’s expansion announcement and its plans to bring 70 new jobs to the region’s animal health corridor over the next two years. “Elanco’s expansion not only is creating new job…
Staying transaction-ready in uncertain market conditions
Editor’s note: The perspectives expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. The following is a paid thought leadership piece from The Ferguson Smith Cohen Group at Morgan Stanley. In the face of market uncertainty, one thing private companies can control is their “transaction-readiness” for an IPO or secondary offering. Discover three things a company…
Zee underscores artists’ need for positive venues; creative powerhouse opens pocket of support
Zahra Briggs developed her creative voice in Kansas City; now she’s setting the stage for fellow independent artists who struggle to find venues that match their vibe — and often have to pay to perform. She’s even creating a version of herself in the metaverse to open access further. A singer and songwriter herself, Briggs — who…
MyAnIML earns NSF funding, patent; now facing new phase of growth with industry validation
Thanks to a recent federal grant — along with a newly secured patent on its first-of-its-kind, proprietary facial recognition tech for cows — MyAnIML is proving its place as a leader within a herd of ag innovation, Shekhar Gupta said. The Overland Park startup received a 250,000 Phase I grant from the National Science Foundation…





